Poison in the Ivy: Race Relations and the Reproduction of Inequality on Elite College Campuses
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Poison in the Ivy challenges popular beliefs about the importance of cross-racial interactions as an antidote to racism in the increasingly diverse United States. He shows that it is the context and framing of such interactions on college campuses that plays an important role in shaping students’ beliefs about race and inequality in everyday life for the future political and professional leaders of the nation. Poison in the Ivy is an eye-opening look at race on elite college campuses, and offers lessons for anyone involved in modern American higher education.
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Poison in the Ivy - W. Carson Byrd
POISON IN THE IVY
THE AMERICAN CAMPUS
Harold S. Wechsler, Series Editor
The books in the American Campus series explore recent developments and public policy issues in higher education in the United States. Topics of interest include access to college and college affordability; college retention, tenure, and academic freedom; campus labor; the expansion and evolution of administrative posts and salaries; the crisis in the humanities and the arts; the corporate university and for-profit colleges; online education; controversy in sports programs; and gender, ethnic, racial, religious, and class dynamics and diversity. Books feature scholarship from a variety of disciplines in the humanities and social sciences.
Gordon Hutner and Feisal G. Mohamed, eds., A New Deal for the Humanities: Liberal Arts and the Future of Public Higher Education
Adrianna Kezar and Daniel Maxey, eds., Envisioning the Faculty for the Twenty-First Century: Moving to a Mission-Oriented and Learner-Centered Model
Scott Frickel, Mathieu Albert, and Barbara Prainsack, eds., Investigating Interdisciplinary Collaboration: Theory and Practice across Disciplines
Jillian M. Duquaine-Watson, Mothering by Degrees: Single Mothers and the Pursuit of Postsecondary Education
Vicki L. Baker, Laura G. Lunsford, and Meghan J. Pifer, Developing Faculty in Liberal Arts Colleges: Aligning Individual Needs and Organizational Goals
W. Carson Byrd, Poison in the Ivy: Race Relations and the Reproduction of Inequality on Elite College Campuses
POISON IN THE IVY
Race Relations and the Reproduction of Inequality on Elite College Campuses
W. CARSON BYRD
RUTGERS UNIVERSITY PRESS
New Brunswick, Camden, and Newark, New Jersey, and London
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Byrd, W. Carson, author.
Title: Poison in the ivy : race relations and the reproduction of inequality on elite college campuses / W. Carson Byrd.
Description: New Brunswick, New Jersey : Rutgers University Press, 2017. | Series: The American campus | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2017008278 (print) | LCCN 2017033131 (ebook) | ISBN 9780813589381 (epub) | ISBN 9780813589398 (Web PDF) | ISBN 9780813589374 (hardback) | ISBN 9780813589367 (paperback)
Subjects: LCSH: Racism in higher education—United States. | College students—United States—Attitudes. | Universities and colleges—Social aspects—United States. | College integration—United States. | Elite (Social sciences)—United States. | United States—Race relations. | BISAC: EDUCATION / Higher. | SOCIAL SCIENCE / Discrimination & Race Relations. | EDUCATION / Inclusive Education. | EDUCATION / Multicultural Education. | SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / General. | SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies. | SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General. | SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / Asian American Studies.
Classification: LCC LC212.42 (ebook) | LCC LC212.42 .B97 2017 (print) | DDC 378.1/982996073—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017008278
A British Cataloging-in-Publication record for this book is available from the British Library.
Copyright © 2017 by W. Carson Byrd
All rights reserved
No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the publisher. Please contact Rutgers University Press, 106 Somerset Street, New Brunswick, NJ 08901. The only exception to this prohibition is fair use
as defined by US copyright law.
The paper used in this publication meets the requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48–1992.
www.rutgersuniversitypress.org
Manufactured in the United States of America
For Kat, a soul molded by intelligence, strength, and grace
One could not be a cool, calm, and detached scientist while Negroes were lynched, murdered and starved.
—W.E.B. Du Bois, Dusk of Dawn
CONTENTS
Preface
1. Easing into Views of Race and Inequality in Everyday Life on Campus
2. Life before College: Factors Influencing Early Views of Race and Inequality
3. Mixing It Up on Campus: Patterns of and Influences on Student Interactions
4. Graduating Racial Ideologies: The College Impact on Views of Race and Inequality
5. When Things Fall Apart: Identities and Interactions within an Intersected Habitus
6. Interacting Futures and the Reproduction of Racial Inequality
Appendix: Methodology
Notes
References
Index
About the Author
PREFACE
It may seem strange at first, but the current examination of how college students at many of the nation’s highly selective colleges and universities interact and think about racial inequality began many miles away in the mountains of Virginia. The seed was planted in a region noted for its once-dominant furniture industry and the coal veins that lie below the mountains. In what was seen as a racially diverse community for the region, my hometown of nearly 7,000 provided a microcosm of how such diversity did not ensure interactions across racial and ethnic lines, nor did it mean inequalities were not prevalent in the community. A subversive norm of elitism intermingled with racial and class disparities, which somewhat solidified the norms of inequality and how people rationalized these differing positions and experiences in our community. From this mountainous hamlet, how colleges can shape whom people interact with, what they know about racial inequality in the world, and how they may contribute to the persistence of racial inequalities through identities, ideologies, and interactions slowly grew into what became this volume.
My hometown is the city center for two counties, literally split in half by the county line, and thus not actually existing in either. As soon as you leave the town limits, you hit farmland and mountains for miles. Stark socioeconomic differences exist in the community given global economic developments in the last three decades. Reflecting deindustrialization in the latter decades of the twentieth century and a precipitous drop in job opportunities during the recent recession, the median household income is less than $30,000, and nearly one-quarter of all residents live in poverty. Growing up, this community was one of the more racially and ethnically diverse areas of this segment of the Blue Ridge Mountains, with 15% of the community being nonwhite. Although the Latino population has grown in recent years, the town and surrounding counties have become even more predominantly white. As with many places throughout the South, the area’s socioeconomic strains intertwine with a long history of racism. The evolving community dynamics around race and class were magnified in the small school district that serves this town, and it is there that I began to wonder how colleges shape people’s views of racial inequality.
My little public school district included three schools. Two and a half, actually, as the middle school was connected to the high school. In all, less than 1,700 students were enrolled in the district when I attended school, and I graduated with less than 70 classmates. Typical high school class sizes shrunk as they moved from ninth to twelfth grade because families were forced to leave town as the factories closed down and classmates who were on work release soon dropped out to help support their families. Nearly two-thirds of all students received free or reduced-price lunches. During middle school, as in most middle schools across the country, cliques and groups formed, with many students using race and class to establish group boundaries that mimicked the broader community. These groups crystallized throughout high school and sometimes created racial and class strife in the hallways. Many of the issues around race baffled me as the same person who espoused hate for another based on the color of their skin would line up next to them on the line of scrimmage during a football game, happy to push their team to victory—only to ignore their teammates once they left the locker room because they believed them to be inferior.
The combined racial and class divides grew more evident as I moved through high school toward graduation. Several professional families, nearly all of whom were white, particularly those who were doctors, had children around the same time I was born, providing a unique dynamic to our classrooms. When we entered high school and began picking activities, the race and class divides were evident in who played what sports and who joined what clubs. Those with means played golf and tennis and ran cross-country. Few nonwhite students were on these teams. The same could be found with the academic competition teams, yearbook, and other clubs. As academic tracking worked its supposed magic sorting students, those from higher income families were in the honors courses or attended governor’s school to gain advanced mathematics and science preparation, and few nonwhite students were found in these classrooms. Most, teachers and community members included, thought this reality was simply natural, with the supposed best and brightest
achieving the most, while those who did not care were relegated to their fate in lower tracks with fewer opportunities and lower expectations.
The importance of how college can shape a person’s views of the world, not simply their knowledge, developed during this time as well. A few of my friends left school to attend a prestigious boarding school. When I would spend time with them during the summers, they talked of strange aspects of their education: prevalent college recruiters, test-prep courses, and private college guidance counselors, among other oddities given my educational experiences of the time. As many of my classmates were from wealthier, professional backgrounds, they began to talk about going to college as if it were simply the next step in life. Soon, college t-shirts and sweatshirts were adorned through the hallways for institutions I had barely recognized, even from my favorite time of year: the March Madness
accompanying the NCAA basketball tournament. The world of college seemed light-years away from where I was living. Several institutions were within a few hours of my hometown, but even they seemed far out of reach to me, which made a place like Harvard or Stanford float through my mind as colleges attended only by people on television, since they were the only people I knew who walked on those campuses.
As former classmates would return home on break from college, something seemed different about them. Many who went on to college attended smaller liberal arts colleges and public universities around the state or across the border in North Carolina, while a select few matriculated to Charlottesville and attended the University of Virginia, or T.J.’s University
as one of them often referred to it, bolstering its founder Thomas Jefferson. Many of these students spoke of groups, communities, and often their hometown differently than before. Although this is not wholly of concern since people further develop their views on various issues in general as they get older, it was how college seemed to influence these views that interested me. Admittedly, I carried with me an idyllic view of colleges and universities that held them up as the bearers of knowledge and social progress. College was, as the American education system as a whole is sometimes referred to, the great equalizer
where people worked hard and achieved their dreams. Campuses were the land of infinite possibilities. At least, so I thought. My former classmates soon presented me with a different perspective on college life as the small echelon of our community who pursued higher education seemed to increasingly view the inequality around town as the result of individual efforts and the cultural attributes of people despite their personal experiences suggesting otherwise. Some of them would look down on former classmates for not attending college or perhaps starting a family rather than pursuing their interest in history or science. Increasingly, inequalities were framed as a natural
reality, regardless of the efforts put forth by someone who showed great promise
during high school. I was confused how people who were given many opportunities to learn about the world could begin narrowing their explanations about the inequalities and life experiences that surrounded them, even for their childhood friends. What was it about college that influenced these views?
This volume contains the study that is my contribution to not only the research literatures on racial inequality and higher education, but to our larger knowledge of how a society continuously diversifying as well as witnessing growing inequalities can be shaped by a small segment of the college-going population, given their disproportionate access to high-status educations and postgraduate opportunities in the labor market and politics. These campuses are sites of ongoing debate around issues of race and inequality while they also diversify themselves. As recent years have shown, elite college campuses can be sites of social change by supporting the demands of students of color to improve educational opportunities and student support services, and also working to remove racist images and namesakes that confront students as they pursue their educations. However, these institutions can also be sites of resistance and retrenched inequalities on campus, which can influence broader society. In this work, I show how the highly selective colleges and universities in the nation can buttress and reinforce narrow perspectives on racial inequality and stereotypical views of racial and ethnic minorities despite the increasing diversity that exists on these campuses, and the research and knowledge available to undercut such views. Further, I show how the patterns of interaction among elite college students take shape and can influence their views of groups and inequality in some ways, while not influencing their views at all in other ways. In the end, this is a story of how racial inequality is normalized through interactions among the best and the brightest
students who can leave a lasting mark on society. It is a story of how the ivy-clad walls of idyllic college campuses can harbor a toxic social structure eroding the foundations of students’ abilities to understand the racial inequality around them on campus and beyond those walls, which can reinforce and even increase racial inequalities in the future. It is a story of how racism and elitism can pervade society, from the quads of college campuses to my little mountain town in Virginia. Ultimately, the current volume grapples with how colleges, particularly those with the most resources and influence on the society we live in, can simultaneously be the great equalizers
and also engines of inequality.
This volume took a village of supporters to come to fruition over nearly ten years of conceptualization, analysis, writing, rewriting, editing, rewriting yet again, and a bit more editing for safe measure. A large debt of gratitude is owed to my editor, Kimberly Guinta, who looked at the original prospectus and chapter samples, and decided to give my project the chance to have life. An even larger debt is owed to my friend and colleague Matthew Hughey, whose willingness to sit down with me from time to time and discuss my project to improve its clarity of ideas and connections made this volume stronger, without question. Despite his overwhelming schedule, he always found ways to give me feedback and support.
Many thanks to my friends and colleagues who looked over different chapters, and provided instrumental feedback to strengthen the arguments and theoretical connections throughout the volume. I greatly appreciate the perspectives provided by Maggie Hagerman and J. T. Thomas, and the questions they raised to increase the depth of this book’s discussions. Victor Ray supported this project since its infancy when we were graduate students and continued his support all the way through the end with feedback on chapters and words of encouragement. Thank you to Jahi Johnson and Thomas Ratliff for their support while I was working on parts of this project during graduate school when we were deeply immersed in our research worlds.
This project would not have been carried out without the vital support of Ellington Graves, who always challenges me to extend my analyses and theoretical connections, and would make time to sit down and talk through obstacles I was facing. I appreciate all of your friendship and advice over the years. Thank you to Jill Kiecolt and Mike Hughes for always challenging my analyses. Your critical perspectives and feedback over the years were essential to making this project as strong as it is now. Wornie Reed always asked me the straightforward questions of What do the data say?
and Why do these findings matter?
that assisted me with keeping the project in perspective and elaborating on a bigger picture about social inequality. Fabio Rojas, who developed into an important mentor after receiving an email about a blog post, added much to the theoretical connections in my young career, particularly with exploring sociological discussions of elitism, diversity, and higher education. Dave Brunsma, I greatly appreciate everything you have provided me as a mentor during and since my postdoctoral years. Thank you to the three mentors who opened my eyes to research and sociology in general: Laurie Pedersen, Tom Plaut, and Alan Bayer. Laurie and Tom pulled me out of the fog as I wandered around the quad of Mars Hill and helped me find my path. Alan, whom the world dearly misses, assisted me with developing my skills and tools to establish a solid sociological foundation for my career from our first meeting to our last. A special thanks to all of my colleagues from graduate school as we supported each other in pushing toward the finish line, and to the colleagues I have gained since that time such as Latrica Best, Rachelle Brunn-Bevel, Woody Doane, David Embrick, Melanie Gast, Kwame Harrison, Kasey Henricks, Ricky Jones, Shirletta Kinchen, Laura Moyer, Sarah Ovink, Anthony Peguero, Rashawn Ray, Louise Seamster, Jessica Welburn, and many others. All of our conversations over the years were and continue to be invaluable to me.
To my family, thank you for supporting my path through life even if you were not quite sure what I was doing in the past, currently, and most likely in the future. To my parents, there is nothing I could say to convey how much I have owed you over the years. From letting me channel my energies into little projects with Legos as a child, to (literally) running around over hill and dale throughout high school, college, and beyond through the development of my career, you have always provided support and a helping hand when times were tough. You have always supported me as I figured out life despite my imperfect record of decisions. To my not-so-little-any-more brother and sister, Spencer and Katelyn, I hope you find comfort in knowing that the world, as crazy as it may seem, holds great things ahead for you in the pages of books, experiences in life, and the dreams you hold for yourselves. This book was once a dream, so run toward your dreams and do not shirk at obstacles that life throws at you. Last, and certainly not least, thank you to Kat, whose love and support helped me revive not only a project, but a life I had once placed on a shelf to collect dust. I am always in awe of your brilliance, your passion for life, and importantly, your patience as I often struggle to maintain a balance between work and life. Here’s to the pages we continue to write together in life after this book.
POISON IN THE IVY
1
Easing into Views of Race and Inequality in Everyday Life on Campus
One evening near the end of the fall semester 2009, three law students at Harvard University gathered for dinner in the dining hall of the Law School. Throughout the evening, the conversation ebbed and flowed among the friends on a range of topics, but an email sent by one of the law students to her friends following the dinner set the Internet on fire with fierce debate. In conjunction with a lively discussion of affirmative action (Lat 2010a), the third-year law student felt her position on race and intelligence needed clarification, and took the time to elaborate her thoughts in an email:
I just hate leaving things where I feel I misstated my position.
I absolutely do not rule out the possibility that African Americans are, on average, genetically predisposed to be less intelligent. I could also obviously be convinced that by controlling for the right variables, we would see that they are, in fact, as intelligent as white people under the same circumstances. The fact is, some things are genetic. African Americans tend to have darker skin. Irish people are more likely to have red hair. (Now on to the more controversial) Women tend to perform less well in math due at least in part to prenatal levels of testosterone, which also account for variations in mathematics performance within genders. [sic] This suggests to me that some part of intelligence is genetic, just like identical twins raised apart tend to have very similar IQs and just like I think my babies will be geniuses and beautiful individuals whether I raise them or give them to an orphanage in Nigeria. I don’t think it is controversial of an opinion to say I think it is at least possible that African Americans are less intelligent on a genetic level, and I didn’t mean to shy away from that opinion at dinner.
I also don’t think that there are no cultural differences or that cultural differences are not likely the most important sources of disparate test scores (statistically, the measureable ones like income do account for some raw differences). I would just like some scientific data to disprove the genetic position, and it is often hard given difficult to quantify cultural aspects. One example (courtesy of Randall Kennedy) is that some people, based on crime statistics, might think African Americans are genetically more likely to be violent, since income and other statistics cannot close the racial gap. In the slavery era, however, the stereotype was of a docile, childlike, African American, and they were, in fact, responsible for very little violence (which was why the handful of rebellions seriously shook white people up). Obviously group wide rates of violence could not fluctuate so dramatically in ten generations if the cause was genetic, and so although there are no quantifiable data currently available to explain
away the racial discrepancy in violent crimes, it must be some nongenetic cultural shift. Of course, there are pro-genetic counterarguments, but if we assume we can control for all variables in the given time periods, the form of the argument is compelling.
In conclusion, I think it is bad science to disagree with a conclusion in your heart, and then try (unsuccessfully, so far at least) to find data that will confirm what you want to be true. Everyone wants someone to take 100 white infants and 100 African American ones and raise them in Disney utopia and prove once and for all that we are all equal on every dimension, or at least the really important ones like intelligence. I am merely not 100% convinced that this is the case.
Please don’t pull a Larry Summers on me (Filipovic 2010).
Although these troubling comments from the law student regarding racial differences in intelligence were condemned from those within and outside of the Law School (Lat 2010a, 2010b), consideration of the educational trajectory of this student points to how unsurprising her comments are among current students attending some of the most selective and influential colleges and universities in the United States. Arguably, these budding elites develop their patterns of interactions and racial ideology in a world framed by both more diversity and less mobility and equality. That is, elite college students’ social worlds frame their interactions and views of race and inequality in disjointed ways. This framing of social interaction and race buoys their views of individuality and merit within and outside their social worlds. Students’ racial ideology provides the rationalizations, justifications, and possible challenges to the reality of racial inequality around them (see Bonilla-Silva 2014, 1997). Ultimately, elite social worlds found on these highly selective college campuses downplay students’ consideration of social structures perpetuating racial inequality in their social world as well as in broader society.
Prior to attending Harvard University’s Law School, the student whose email is quoted above was an undergraduate student at Princeton. Her academics at Princeton were buttressed by hands-on research within a department known for its commitment to studying inequalities in society. Majoring in sociology, she excelled in her academic pursuits and worked closely with a faculty member on their research examining race and inequality in higher education, specifically the influences of cross-race interactions on attitudes, behaviors, and perceptions among college students, which was incorporated into a larger volume examining elite higher education (North 2010).¹ Thus, this law student was actively involved in several ways with discussions of race and inequality in society during her undergraduate years. Yet her position stated in the above email to her friends is in stark contrast to the conclusions of the research she worked on with her faculty member. Her perception of race and inequality did not match the reality she was exposed to in her classes and research.
At the time of the email controversy, like many of her classmates at elite colleges and universities, the aforementioned student was set to work in an influential position in society, specifically under a judge on a United States Court of Appeals (Lat 2010a). The opportunity to work in such a position gives her the ability to help shape varying aspects of court decisions possibly influencing future policies. Thus, it is not hard to imagine a case about racial discrimination appearing on the docket for judgment, and this student’s prejudicial position toward racial and ethnic minorities, particularly African Americans, could influence the materials she selects and the summaries she writes of research and legal outcomes to assist the judge with their rulings and positions. The opportunity to clerk for a high-ranking judge is a product of the privileged position of the student and her attendance at highly selective universities affording their students with such opportunities, which are not available to others (see Binder, Davis, and Bloom 2016; Rivera 2015). Importantly, this student and most who attend elite institutions of higher education are afforded the opportunity to develop their views of race and inequality in differing social worlds, whereby social interactions take on differing meanings and influence their racial ideology in varying ways that may seem counterintuitive at first, but fit a larger narrative of openness, individuality, and diversity framing social interactions and racial inequality today (Khan 2011, 194–199; see also Khan 2012, 361–377; Khan and Jerolmack 2013, 9–19). As these students move into lucrative positions in political and professional sectors of society at much higher rates than other groups in society (Domhoff 1978; Mills 1956; Zweigenhaft 1993; Zweignehaf and Domhoff 1991), these different experiences in the elite social world have important implications for society as a whole in relation to future progress toward racial equality.
The most selective and prestigious colleges in the United States are often emulated and mimicked in relation to their varying policies, programs, and general openness to diversity and inclusion (see DiMaggio and Powell 1983; Kraatz and Zajac 1996; Meyer and Rowan 2007). Such emulation and mimicry extends to efforts to produce and sustain racial diversity and inclusion among students, faculty, and staff on campus. However, the contemporary positions situating these institutions as ideal models are often ahistorical and miss the inequality and racism of past and contemporary eras on these campuses, which influence student experiences.² As this volume indicates, the most selective colleges and universities in the United States exhibit a structure and culture inhibiting current and future generations of students